Maplewood Lacrosse Club (MLC) is a non-profit organization run by volunteers that provides the opportunity
to play recreational, competitive lacrosse to boys in grades K-8 who are residents of Maplewood
and South Orange, NJ. We are affiliated with the sport’s national governing body, US Lacrosse.
Founded in 1957, MLC continues to expand and evolve to meet local demand for lacrosse, as one of
the fastest growing youth sports in the United States.

Above and beyond practicing lacrosse skills, participants in MLC programs are expected to exercise values—such as accountability, integrity and perseverance—that serve to build teamwork and leadership skills.
While our day-to-day mission is to teach boys to be the best lacrosse players they can be, our long-term vision is inspiring our players to take the character-building lessons they learn on the field out into the world.

OUR HISTORY

History of the Maplewood Lacrosse ClubAuthor Unknown, Circa 1970

In the late 1950s, a group of interested men in Maplewood formed the Maplewood Lacrosse Club in an effort to popularize the sport in our area. Nineteen years later it can be said, without reservation, that they succeeded. The sport grew rapidly as other clubs were started and many schools began to participate. Maplewood was instrumental in this growth as our teams played the game throughout the state as well as in New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland.

The Club started with a clinic in 1959, a young, inexperienced team that managed to score but one victory. That win, however, was the beginning of an outstanding record...fourteen consecutive winning seasons and five State Championships followed.

Lacrosse had come to New Jersey and the Big Green spread the word with their performances against college freshman, prep and high schools.

The Club was run, and still is, by fathers and mothers of the boys and interested citizens of the towns of Maplewood and South Orange. The players are students of Columbia High School or one of the junior highs. Money was raised each year through solicitations. The players were generally driven to away games by parents. Sandwiches were made, soda pop donated. So many generous people gave their time and energy over the years to make the club and the team a success. To name names would be unfair and an almost endless task.

The team became known as the "Green Bay Packers" of New Jersey school lacrosse. The spirit of the Club and the overall performance of the teams that represented it became known throughout the east as our graduates went on to play in colleges. The alumni return each year at seasons' end to play against the current team. Garbed in makeshift uniforms and helmets that shows the colors of Pennsylvania, Navy, Denison, Johns Hopkins, Rutgers, and any number of schools, some seventy of them returned last June for the annual encounter.

It was decided not to mention names in this brief history, but Carl Huelsenbeck and Dick MacNett cannot be passed by. The team had several coaches over the years but these two served the longest and both did outstanding jobs and were greatly admired by the lads who played under their direction.

And finally, the memories, the trips to Annapolis in a fruitless effort to win one against the Navy plebes...the hair raising encounters with Lawrenceville and the double overtime, sudden death win for a State Championship that left players and spectators limp...the long long trips to the Hill School...the donnybrook with the New York Military Academy...the shock of losing to Fair Lawn High and realizing after nine years that the rest of the world was catching up...the exhilarating victory over the Army plebes in the pouring rain at West Point and then repeating it the next year just to show it wasn't luck...the wild rivalry with Scarsdale Lacrosse Club...the trip to Penn, to Princeton and winning often enough...Lehigh and Delaware our dearest college friends who never were able to beat the Green Machine...Montclair H.S. after eleven straight losses finally getting our number and beating us 5- in a heartbreaking State Championship game...the Lancers Boys Club from Baltimore coming north and finding that lacrosse was played in Jersey too...the 6-2 win over the English H.S. All Stars in a remarkably well-played game...Lacrosse Day in Maplewood at Underhill Field when bud Palmer did the honors and Lawrenceville cooperated once by losing...the first game at Cornell when our kids gave an undefeated Cornell Frosh team all it could handle...the schools at Boonton, Newton and Hanover Park becoming tough opponents as the game spread in NJ...the year our guys stole the show in the North-South H.S. All Star game by scoring eight of the North's sixteen goals in a winning effort before thousands of fans at Washington and Lee...the Pingry teams that always gave it all they had against Maplewood—sometimes it was enough...the fifty kids who made All-State, eleven (!!!) in one year...the banquets at seasons end...the awards...the meetings at members' homes where year in and year out we managed to raise just about enough money...best, best of all, the games.